Campanile di San Marco

The
Campanile di San Marco, or Belltower of St. Mark's, has stood for more than a
thousand years--or for less than a century, depending on how you define "truth in
advertising."

The present-day structure was built in 1912 as an exact
replica of its predecessor, which collapsed unexpectly on the morning of July 14, 1902. Ian Littlewood's
Venice: A Literary Companion quotes an American architect's
eyewitness report of the slow-motion implosion in The Times of London:

"Workmen had been repointing the Campanile, and had
discovered a bad crack starting from the crown of the second arched window on the corner
toward St. Mark's. This crack had shown signs of opening further, and they feared small
fragments falling down on the crowded Piazza; so the music was quietly stopped in the hope
that the crowd would naturally disperse. The effect was exactly the opposite of that
desired. Every one rushed to the Piazza.

"At eleven I was under the tower which rose in the dim moonlight.
The crack was distinctly visible even in this half light, but apparently menaced only a
corner of the tower. On Monday, early, the Campanile was resplendent in the sunshine. At
nine my little girl Katharine went off with her horns of corn to feed the pigeons. Mrs. --
was at St. Laccana, and I was near the Rialto sketching. The golden Angel on the tower was
shining far away. Suddenly I saw it slowly sink directly downward beneath a line of roofs,
and a dense grey dust rose in clouds. At once a crowd of people began running across the
Rialto towards the Piazza, and I ordered my gondolier to the Piazzetta. On arrival the
sight was pitiful. Of that splendid shaft all that remained was a mound of white dust,
spreading to the Walls of St. Mark's."

Some Venetians claimed that St. Mark's Square looked better without the tower, and
others thought it was foolish to spend taxpayers' money on a replacement. In the end,
donations from outside Venice covered most of the expense, and a rebuilt Campanile was
christened on April 25, 1912--exactly 1,000 years after the foundations of the original
structure had been laid, according to historians of the time.

A solar-powered lighthouse

Although "campanile" means "bell tower," the Campanile di San Marco
did double duty as a military watchtower when it was constructed in the 10th Century.
Later, as the tower was expanded and refined, its bronze-sheathed roof caught the sun's
rays and acted as a daytime beacon for mariners.

The Campanile received an overhaul in the early 1500s after being damaged by an
earthquake, giving it the profile that we see today. It also received its share of
historic visitors, including Galileo (who showed the Doge his famous telescope in 1609),
Goethe (who viewed the Adriatic from the arched windows), and Emperor Frederick III of the
Holy Roman Empire, who is said to have ridden his horse up the tower in 1452.

A bell for every occasion

The Campanile's five bells were intended to communicate five different messages. The
largest signaled the beginning and end of each work day; another rang the hour; a third
called senators to the Doge's Palace; the fourth summoned magistrates; and the smallest--il
Maleficio--was rung to announce executions of the prisoners who dangled in cages
halfway up the tower's walls. The bells are still rung today, but only to maintain
tradition and entertain the tourists.

A symbol for separatists

On May 9, 1997, a band of young Venetian separatists hijacked a ferry, drove their
homemade armored car and camper van aboard, and steamed up the Grand Canal toward the
Piazza San Marco. Upon landing shortly after midnight, the eight would-be revolutionaries
smashed through the Campanile's entrance door and made their way to the top. The group
then hung a banner with the Lion of St. Mark from the tower windows and announced that
"a regular unit of the Most Serene Venetian Army has tonight liberated St. Mark's
Square."

According to news reports, the escapade was scheduled as a prelude to the 200th
anniversary of Napoleon's conquest of Venice, which signaled the end of the
thousand-year-old Venetian Republic. Carabinieri (paramilitary police) used a
telescopic ladder to reach a balcony on the tower, then climbed to the top and arrested
the invaders. No one was hurt, and the Northern League--Italy's main separatist
party--later characterized the protesters' actions as "madness."

On a clear day, you can see forever

Providing you aren't dressed up in combat fatigues and carrying weapons, you can see
the Campanile's bells at close range for the price of a ticket. (Enter on the
Piazzetta side, around the corner from the exit on the Piazza San Marco.) The tower
normally opens daily at 9:30 a.m., with closing times that vary according to the season.
If you aren't athletic, don't worry--an elevator will whisk you to the viewing
platform, providing your feet can stand waiting in line on busy summer days and holiday
weekends.